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Silent Hill 2 remake reportedly coming to PS Plus later this month
Game Reviews

Silent Hill 2 remake reportedly coming to PS Plus later this month

by admin October 7, 2025


The remake of Silent Hill 2 is reportedly heading to the PS Plus catalogue later this month, available for Extra and Premium subscribers.

That’s according to reliable insider billbil_kun of Dealabs, who reported Konami and Bloober Team’s remake will be added on 21st October.

Silent Hill 2 was released last October as a PS5 console exclusive, also available on PC. A trailer from last year added it would be available on “other formats” from 8th October 2025, exactly a year later.

Silent Hill 2 ReviewWatch on YouTube

As such, the game’s reported inclusion on PS Plus would give PlayStation a boost should those other formats be announced imminently.

It also continues momentum for the series, following the release last month of Silent Hill f developed by NeoBards Entertainment and published by Konami.

“Silent Hill f’s frustrating first-half is outweighed by a brilliant, delirious second that’s well worth the initial slog,” reads our Silent Hill f review.

Bloober, meanwhile, released Cronos: The New Dawn last month, its original sci-fi survival horror set in 1980’s Poland that’s also been well-received.

Last week, Bloober confirmed a remake of Silent Hill 1 is now in full production, and hasn’t ruled out a sequel to Cronos.

Sony already revealed the PS Plus games for October at its State of Play stream, which includes Alan Wake 2, Cocoon, and Goat Simulator 3. Silent Hill 2 would seemingly be a welcome surprise extra.



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October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Product Reviews

Amazon is reportedly aggressively pitching law enforcement on its cloud services

by admin October 2, 2025


Forbes has published an investigation into Amazon’s efforts to court law enforcement clients for artificial intelligence and surveillance services. The article reveals that not only is the company promoting Amazon Web Services as a potential police tool, but it has been partnering with other businesses in that sector to use its cloud infrastructure. According to the Forbes report, Amazon’s partners that are pitching police departments include car tracking tools and license plate readers from Flock Safety, gun detection by ZeroEyes, real-time crime center apps from C3 AI and Revir Technologies, and AI that helps compose police reports from Abel Police and Mark43. The piece estimated that the police tech business is worth $11 billion. Based on emails sent by members of Amazon’s law enforcement and safety team, the company is working awfully hard to get a share of those billions.

The company’s aggressive sales work has raised outcry for privacy issues around how police officers might use these tools, which is unsurprising given that AI tools can create inaccuracies and easily be misused. Regulation is still a piecemeal affair and some law enforcement departments have failed to follow what laws do exist about tech use.

“​​It’s dismaying to see one of the largest and most powerful companies pushing authoritarian surveillance tech in this way,” ACLU Senior Policy Analyst Jay Stanley told Forbes. “I didn’t realize Amazon was serving as a midwife for AI law enforcement technologies.”



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October 2, 2025 0 comments
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The OpenAI logo next to a picture of a woman wearing sunglasses, which was generated by the company's Sora AI model.
Gaming Gear

OpenAI’s New Social Network Is Reportedly TikTok If It Was Just an AI Slop Feed

by admin September 30, 2025



Welcome to the age of anti-social media. According to a report from Wired, OpenAI is planning on launching a standalone app for its video generation tool Sora 2 that will include a TikTok-style video scroll that will let people scroll through entirely AI-generated videos. The quixotic effort follows Meta’s recent launch of an AI-slop-only feed on its Meta AI app that was met with nearly universal negativity.

Per Wired, the Sora 2 app will feature the familiar swipe-up-to-scroll style navigation that is featured for most vertical video platforms like TikTok, Instagram Reels, or YouTube Shorts. It’ll also use a personalized recommendation algorithm to feed users content that might appeal to their interests. Users will be able to like, comment, or “remix” a post—all very standard social media fare.

The big difference is that all of the content on the platform will be AI-generated via OpenAI’s video generation model that can take text, photos, or existing video and AI-ify it. The videos will be up to 10 seconds long, presumably because that’s about how long Sora can hold itself together before it starts hallucinating weird shit. (The first version of Sora allows videos up to 60 seconds, but struggles to produce truly convincing and continuous imagery for that long.) According to Wired, there is no way to directly upload a photo or video and post it unedited.

Interestingly, OpenAI has figured out how to work a social element into the app, albeit in a way that has a sort of inherent creepiness to it. Per Wired, the Sora 2 app will ask users to verify their identity via facial recognition to confirm their likeness. After confirming their identity, their likeness can be used in videos. Not only can they insert themselves into a video, but other users can tag you and use your likeness in their videos. Users will reportedly get notified any time their likeness is used, even if the generated video is saved to drafts and never posted.

How that will be implemented when and if the app launches to the public, we’ll have to see. But as reported, it seems like an absolute nightmare. Basically, the only thing that the federal government has managed to find any sort of consensus around when it comes to regulating AI is offering some limited protections against non-consensual deepfakes. As described, that kind of seems like one feature of Sora 2 is letting your likeness be manipulated by others. Surely there will be some sort of opt-out available or ability to restrict who can use your likeness, right?

According to Wired, there will be some protections as to the type of content that Sora 2 will allow users to create. It is trained to refuse to violate copyright, for instance, and will reportedly have filters in place to restrict certain types of videos from being produced. But will it actually offer sufficient protection to people? OpenAI made a big point to emphasize how it added protections to the original Sora model to prevent it from generating nudity and explicit images, but tests of the system managed to get it to create prohibited content anyway at a low-but-not-zero rate.

Gizmodo reached out to OpenAI to confirm its plans for the app, but did not receive a response at the time of publication. There has been speculation for months about the launch of Sora 2, with some expectation that it would be announced at the same time as GPT-5. For now, it and its accompanying app remain theoretical, but there is at least one good idea hidden in the concept of the all-AI social feed, albeit probably not in the way OpeAI intended it: Keep AI content quarantined.



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September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Product Reviews

Tile trackers reportedly have a security flaw that can let stalkers track your location

by admin September 29, 2025


Researchers have discovered major security flaws with Tile tracking tags, according to a report by Wired. These flaws could allow both the company itself and tech-savvy stalkers to track a user’s location. The security issue could also let a malicious actor falsely frame a Tile owner for stalking, as the flaw can make it appear as if a particular tag is constantly in the vicinity of somebody else’s tag.

The issue pertains to how Tile tags transmit data during use. Tile tags transmit a lot of data beyond that of other trackers, including the static MAC address and the rotating ID. According to reporting, none of this stuff is encrypted. The rotating ID changes all of the time, but a MAC address doesn’t.

Researchers believe that all of this information is stored in cleartext, making it easy for hackers to get ahold of. This also would theoretically give Tile itself the ability to track its users, though the company says it doesn’t have this capability.

It gets worse. Anyone with a radio frequency scanner can allegedly intercept all of this information as it’s being transmitted, creating another potential security hole. Also, this problem might not even be solved if Tile decides to stop transmitting the MAC address. This is because the company generates its rotating ID in such a way that future codes can be reliably predicted from past ones.

“An attacker only needs to record one message from the device,” one of the researchers behind the findings said, adding that a single recorded message will “fingerprint it for the rest of its lifetime.” The researcher said this creates a risk of systemic surveillance.

The security researchers, who are involved with the Georgia Institute of Technology, reached out to Tile’s parent company Life360 in November of last year to report the findings. Wired said the company stopped communicating with the researchers in February. The company did say it has made a number of improvements to its security but didn’t elaborate further.



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September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Apple’s ‘Veritas’ chatbot is reportedly an employee-only test of Siri’s AI upgrades
Gaming Gear

Apple’s ‘Veritas’ chatbot is reportedly an employee-only test of Siri’s AI upgrades

by admin September 29, 2025


According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman Apple is testing Siri’s upcoming revamp using an internal chatbot called Veritas. The company’s struggles as it tries to keep pace in the AI race are no secret. The next-gen Siri has been delayed multiple times and the debut of Apple Intelligence was met with a tepid response. Veritas gives Apple the ability to quickly develop, test, and collect feedback on new Siri features like “search[ing] through personal data… and perform[ing] in-app actions like editing photos.“

According to Gurman Veritas resembles other chatbot apps like ChatGPT and Gemini. Employees type requests, have back and forth conversations, and can even revisit old exchanges to dig deeper on a particular topic. But, at least for now, it doesn’t appear like there’s any plan to release it to consumers. (Which Gurman believes is a mistake.) Instead Apple plans to keep its internal chatbot just that, internal. Instead it’s looking increasingly likely that Apple is going to rely on Google’s Gemini for its AI-powered search.



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September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Gaming Gear

Apple is reportedly nearing production for its latest M5-powered MacBooks

by admin September 28, 2025


The latest Apple silicon is about to hit the assembly lines, according to Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman. In the latest Power On newsletter, Gurman said that Apple “is nearing mass production of its next MacBook Pros, MacBook Airs and two new Mac monitors.” Gurman added that these upgraded products are scheduled for release sometime between the end of this year and the first quarter of next year.

Earlier this year, Gurman noted that Apple was expected to start production on the M5 MacBook Pro during the second half of 2025. All signs seem to point toward Apple following its typical release schedule, where the latest MacBook Pro makes its fall debut, followed by the reveal of the upgraded MacBook Air in the spring. However, Gurman previously mentioned in a July edition of his newsletter that “Apple is now internally targeting a launch early next year” for the MacBook Pro instead.

Beyond the upcoming MacBooks, we’re expecting one of the two Mac monitors to be the upgraded Studio Display. First released in March 2022, Apple’s Studio Display could use a refresh, which some rumors say will include a mini-LED display, along with overall improvements to brightness and color quality.



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September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Investors including Saudi 's PIF are reportedly in "advanced talks" for a $50bn leveraged buyout of EA
Game Reviews

Investors including Saudi ‘s PIF are reportedly in “advanced talks” for a $50bn leveraged buyout of EA

by admin September 27, 2025


A group of financial investors are in “advanced talks” with EA to go private with a valuation worth around $50 billion (£37.5 billion).

According to the Wall Street Journal (£), the investors – thought to include equity firm Silver Lake, Affinity Partners, and Saudi Arabia’s controversial Public Investment Fund (PIF) – could announce a deal as soon as next week. If true, this would make it the biggest leveraged buyout ever.

News of the potential deal sent EA’s share prices rocketing, closing 15 percent higher on Friday.

Saudi Arabia’s PIF increased its stake in FIFA publisher EA back in 2023. The PIF initiative was designed to diversify the country’s revenues via investment in foreign companies, with a large arm focused on the video games industry. It’s chaired by Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the controversial ruler blamed by the CIA for the assassination of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who has upheld the country’s notoriously poor human rights record.

Despite this, the PIF holds a notable stake in a swathe of gaming companies, including Grand Theft Auto publisher Take-Two Interactive, Nintendo, Embracer, Nexon, Capcom, and Ubisoft, after boss Yves Guillemot secured PIF funding, leading to new DLC for 2023’s Assassin’s Creed Mirage set in 9th century AlUla, an ancient Arabian city.

Affinity Partners was founded by President Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

EA has declined to comment.



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September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Electronic Arts
Product Reviews

EA is reportedly about to be sold in a record-setting $50 billion buyout to an investor group that includes private equity and Saudi Arabia

by admin September 27, 2025



As reported by the The Wall Street Journal, gaming giant EA is set to go private⁠—that is, no longer be traded on the stock market⁠—in a $50 billion deal with an investor group. This would be the largest such leveraged buyout ever recorded.

According to the WSJ’s anonymous sources, EA could be sold for as much as $50 billion, though the final price has not yet been agreed on, and EA has an estimated market value of $43 billion. The group of investors reportedly includes the private equity firm Silver Lake and the government of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

The deal could be announced as early as next week, and would be the largest leveraged buyout ever recorded. A leveraged buyout is when a private equity firm uses a significant amount of borrowed money to seal the deal, with the asset set to be acquired used as collateral in the debt.


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This effectively leaves the acquired company liable for the debt⁠—if its income can’t adequately service the debt, it will bear the consequences of a default, not the investors who made the purchase, and that usually means closures and layoffs. As reported by the Los Angeles Times, one such leveraged buyout eventually resulted in bankruptcy and closure for the once-ubiquitous toy retailer, Toys R Us.

The fact that the reported cost of the deal—up to $50 billion—is close to EA’s estimated value (what’s $7 billion between friends?) could give reason for optimism that EA’s debt burden would be proportional to its means. Even aside from eventual bankruptcy, though, there’s precedent for acquisitions like this causing massive disruptions to the company: Microsoft cut 1,900 jobs at Xbox in January 2024 shortly after its acquisition of Activision-Blizzard, and Blizzard Entertainment was heavily affected in particular.

The other known quantity in the purported deal, the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund, has been making inroads in games for several years as part of a multifaceted push into global media and entertainment. This has included:

Critics of the Saudi Arabian government have called this practice “sportswashing,” or using a growing influence and ubiquity in the entertainment industries to distract from the government’s human rights record.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

EA, much like its competitor Ubisoft, has struggled in recent years. Once formidable titans, both have been left behind as consolidation efforts have turned Microsoft and Sony into unassailable super heavyweights. At the same time, smaller publishers like DreadXP, Devolver, and Playstack have become ubiquitous at the other end of the budget spectrum.

EA lost the lucrative FIFA license, leading to its new, genericized EA FC series. Beloved RPG developer BioWare was sharply downsized after Dragon Age: The Veilguard proved a relative sales failure. The impending release of Battlefield 6, which has seen massive beta numbers and a positive critical reception, is looking like a much-needed win for the company.

Should the deal go through, here are some of the major studios and games that could be affected:

  • BioWare: Mass Effect and Dragon Age.
  • Respawn: Titanfall, Apex Legends, the Star Wars: Jedi series.
  • DICE (and the other ‘Battlefield Studios’): Battlefield and Mirror’s Edge
  • Maxis: The Sims 4 and Project Rene.
  • The Madden NFL and EA Sports College Football series (and other EA Sports games).
  • The dormant Dead Space and Need for Speed series.
  • The once-dormant Skate, recently resurrected.
  • The Command & Conquer series.
  • The Origin Systems back catalogue, including Ultima and Wing Commander. Pepperidge Farm remembers.



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September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Gaming Gear

Apple reportedly made a ChatGPT-clone to test Siri’s new capabilities

by admin September 27, 2025


In the pursuit of actually releasing the updated version of Siri the company promised way back at WWDC 2024, Apple is taking a page out of OpenAI’s book. According to Bloomberg, the company has created a ChatGPT-inspired app to test Siri’s new capabilities ahead of the release of the improved voice assistant next year.

This new app, called “Veritas” internally, will likely never make its way to the public in its current form, but offers Apple employees a faster way to test Siri’s new skills. That includes letting users search through personal data stored on their phone, like their emails and messages, or taking action in apps, like editing photos. The new app is apparently also a way for Apple to “gather feedback on whether the chatbot format has value,” Bloomberg writes.

While an internal app doesn’t make it any clearer how useful Apple’s updated Siri will be, it does suggest the project is in a more advanced stage than before. Given the difficulty the company’s faced actually releasing its various AI products — including publicly delaying the Siri update back in March 2025 — that’s meaningful.

Apple’s original promise for Apple Intelligence was that it could offer a curated selection of AI-powered features with a level of privacy and polish that its competitors couldn’t muster. The reality is that Apple shipped a collection of so-so features that worked, but couldn’t pull off its truly impressive demo: a Siri informed on the context of your life and with the ability to actually do things on your phone.

Apple is only realizing that vision in 2026, Bloomberg reports, through a combination of its own AI models, and at least one third-party model from its competitors. In June, the company was reportedly considering using a model from either OpenAI or Anthropic, but as of August, the company is now apparently circling a partnership with Google.



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September 27, 2025 0 comments
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GameFi Guides

Tether (USDT) Fundraising Interest Reportedly From Softbank, Ark Invest

by admin September 26, 2025



Tech-focused investment companies SoftBank and Ark Invest are among the firms in early stage talks to invest in Tether, issuer of the world’s largest stablecoin USDT (USDT), Bloomberg reported on Friday.

The report follows this week’s news about Tether looking to raise up to $20 billion in a fundraising round that would value the firm at around $500 billion, which would make it one of the world’s most valuable private companies.

The fundraising and the hefty valuation underscores the red-hot stablecoin trend, a fast-growing crypto sector with a potential to disrupt global payment flows. Stablecoins are a class of cryptocurrencies with prices tied to fiat money like the U.S. dollar, and could offer a cheaper, faster alternative for cross-border transactions using blockchain rails, proponents say. The sector has grown 40% year-to-date to $287 billion, RWA.xyz data shows, and analysts at global bank Citi project stablecoins will hit $4 trillion in market value in its bull market scenario.

Tether’s USDT is the market leader with a $173 billion market capitalization, predominantly backed by U.S. Treasuries that has provided a windfall of profits from bond yields over the past years. The company reported $4.9 billion in profits in the second quarter of this year.

Circle (CRCL), issuer of the second-largest stablecoin USDC of over $70 billion, went public this June and saw its stock price skyrocket to $300 from around $30, underscoring the investor appetite to gain exposure to the stablecoin theme.

Tether, which has focused on serving emerging markets with limited U.S. dollar access, announced earlier this month it intended to formally enter the U.S. market with a dollar token dubbed USAT, designed to meet the requirements of the GENIUS Act, the nation’s first federal crypto law which sett rules for stablecoins. It also poached Bo Hines, former director of the White House Crypto Council advising President Donald Trump on crypto policies, to lead its U.S. division.

Read more: Stablecoin Market Could Reach $4 Trillion by 2030, Citi Says in Revised Forecast



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September 26, 2025 0 comments
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